Webcast planned for public drawing of elk
licenses
HARRISBURG – Hunters looking
to participate in this year’s Pennsylvania elk season have until Aug. 26 to
submit an application through the Pennsylvania Game Commission’s Pennsylvania
Automated License System (PALS). This
can be done at any issuing agent or through the “Enter Elk Drawing” icon in the
center of the agency’s homepage (www.pgc.state.pa.us).
Applicants must pay a $10.70
non-refundable application fee to be included in the drawing. Details on the elk season and drawing are
available on pages 86-88 of the 2012-13 Pennsylvania Hunting and Trapping
Digest, which is provided to license buyers and may be viewed on the
agency’s website.
On Friday, Sept. 14, at 10
a.m., the Game Commission will hold a public, computerized drawing in the
auditorium of its Harrisburg headquarters.
At that time, the agency will award the 65 elk licenses, the first 19
drawn will receive an antlered license and the next 46 drawn will receive an
antlerless license.
By law, only one
application is permitted per person per year, and PALS will prohibit an
individual from submitting more than one application. Individuals are not
required to purchase a resident or nonresident general hunting license to apply
for the drawing. However, if they are
drawn for one of the elk licenses, hunters then will be required to purchase the
appropriate resident or nonresident general hunting license and view the elk
hunt orientation video produced by the Game Commission before being permitted to
purchase the elk license. The elk
license fees are $25 for residents and $250 for nonresidents.
There is no cap, or
limit, for the number of licenses that may be awarded to nonresidents.
Individuals who applied in each year from 2003 through 2011 but were not awarded
an elk license have nine preference points heading into this year’s drawing if
they submit an application this year, and will have their name entered into the
drawing 10 times (nine preference points plus the point for this year’s
application).
As part of the preference
point system established by the agency in 2003, consecutive applications are not
required to maintain previously earned preference points, but those points can
be activated only in years that a hunter submits an application. For instance, if a hunter has nine preference
points, but does not enter the 2012 drawing, he/she will not have any chances in
the upcoming drawing. However, their
preference points will remain on hold until they apply in a future drawing. Once a hunter is awarded an elk license –
either an antlered or antlerless elk license – the hunter’s preference points
will revert to zero.
Additionally, hunters who
want to earn a preference point for this year, but know that they would not be
able to participate in the elk hunting season if drawn, have the option of
simply purchasing a preference point for $10.70. While they will not be included in the
drawing for the 2012 elk licenses, they will continue to build their preference
points.
Those applying for an elk
license can choose either an antlered or antlerless elk license, or they may
select either sex on their application.
For those who select “antlered only,” if they are drawn after the
antlered licenses are allocated, they will not receive an elk license. For those who do receive an antlered elk
license, they will not be permitted to re-apply for future elk hunting
opportunities for five years. However,
those who received an antlerless elk license in any of the previous hunts may
submit an application this year.
Applicants also have
the opportunity to identify their elk hunt zone preference, or they may select
“NP” (no preference). If drawn and their
preferred hunt zone is filled, applicants will be assigned a specific zone by
the Game Commission.
The public drawing of applications to be awarded licenses will be webcast
on Sept. 14. To view the drawing, a
special icon will be posted online the morning of the public drawing for
individuals to click on and watch the drawing. “Each year, tens of thousands of individuals apply for an elk license,”
said Carl G. Roe, Game Commission executive director. “Unfortunately, not all of them can make it
to the public drawings and we are unable to send everyone who applied a letter
to let them know whether they were drawn. By webcasting the drawings, we make it
convenient for more people to view these events without having to
travel.”
Roe also noted that those who have submitted applications can check the
status of their applications for the elk drawing, as well as their antlerless
deer license applications, thanks to the Pennsylvania Automated License System
(PALS).
To access this information, go to the Game Commission website
(www.pgc.state.pa.us), and click on the blue box in the upper right-hand
corner of the homepage. Click on the
“Purchase License Permit and or Application/Replace License and or Permit”
option, which includes the ability to “Check on the status of any Lottery
Application,” scroll down and click on the “Start Here” button at the bottom of
the page. At this page, choose one of
the identification options below to check your records, fill in the necessary
information and click on the “Continue” button. Click on the appropriate
residency status, which will display your current personal information. At the bottom of the page, choose the “Check
on the status of any Lottery Application” button, and then hit
“Continue.”
“While this may seem like a lot of clicking and box checking to get to
the information, the system is designed to protect an individual’s personal
information, while at the same time enabling that person to check on the status
of his or her applications,” Roe said. “In the past, the only way to know for
sure that you were awarded an elk license was to attend the public drawings,
wait for a letter in the mail or to call the Game Commission.
“Thanks to PALS, we will be able to update the data files shortly after
the elk drawing is completed so that license buyers will be able to see for
themselves if they were drawn for one of the limited number of Pennsylvania elk
hunting licenses.”
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